Pearl River County v. Merchants Bank & Trust Co.

151 So. 756, 168 Miss. 612, 1934 Miss. LEXIS 355
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 8, 1934
DocketNo. 30936.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 151 So. 756 (Pearl River County v. Merchants Bank & Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pearl River County v. Merchants Bank & Trust Co., 151 So. 756, 168 Miss. 612, 1934 Miss. LEXIS 355 (Mich. 1934).

Opinion

*620 Anderson, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellants, Pearl River county and Bank of Picayune, filed their original bill and later an amended bill in the chancery court of Hinds county against J. S'. Love, superintendent of banks, Merchants’ Bank & Trust Company, in liquidation, J. L. Berry, liquidator, and L. S. May, treasurer of’ the state, seeking preference payment out of the assets of the bank of eighteen thousand three hundred forty-eight dollars and forty-three cents, representing the proceeds of certain school warrants belonging to Pearl River county, which warrants the Merchants’ Bank & Trust Company had collected, and had the proceeds in its custody at the time it ceased to do unrestricted banking business. The cause was heard on the original and amended bills and answers thereto and proofs, resulting in a decree denying’ appellants relief.

There is no real conflict in the evidence as to the facts. Counsel for the superintendent of banks concedes that the statement of facts contained in appellants’ brief is substantially correct. An examination of the record reveals that to be true. Therefore, in stating the case we shall adhere rather closely to that statement of facts.

Pearl River county had two depositories — the Bank of Commerce and the Bank of Picayune. The former was the active depository while the latter was the inactive one. Under the orders of the board of supervisors appointing the two depositories, it was provided that forty per cent, of the funds of the county should be kept with the Bank of Commerce and sixty per cent, with the Bank of Picayune, and all warrants drawn on the county should be paid by the Bank of Commerce, and the debits and credits between the two banks should be kept so as to carry out that purpose.

On September 19, 19S2, the chancery clerk of P'earl River county, in his capacity as auditor of the county, had in his custody requisitions on the state auditor for *621 certain common school warrants, and on that date delivered the requisitions to the Bank of Commerce at Poplarville. At the time of so doing, he issued his warrant to the Bank of Commerce authorizing the bank as county depository to receive into its custody the funds to be derived from the collection of the warrants. These requisitions called for the warrants here involved, and also other school warrants. The B;ank of Commerce did not accept the requisitions as cash nor as deposits by the county, nor did it credit the county with any amount. It did not issue its receipt in triplicate, which it would have been required to do under the law if the delivery of the requisitions constituted a deposit in the bank as a depository. On the same day these requisitions were received, the Bank of Commerce sent them to the state auditor. The form used for the requisitions contained a receipt printed on the back. This was required to be signed by the depository before the state auditor would issue his warrants. When the requisitions were handled by mail, as these were, it was necessary for these receipts to be signed before the requisitions were sent to the state auditor. The receipt is in this language: “Receipt of Auditor’s warrant for the above amount in full payment of the above claim is hereby acknowledged.” The warrants were issued on September 21, 1933, and the receipts on the requisitions had been signed on September 19th. The warrants were promptly mailed to the Bank of Commerce; upon their receipt the Bank of Commerce did not accept them as money or funds belonging to the county. The county was not given credit therefor on the books of the bank. No receipts were issued for the warrants by the bank as county depository. At that time and for some time thereafter, the state was behind in the payment of its school obligations. No cash was available for the payment of these warrants. The Bank of Commerce accepted the warrants for collection only and for nearly a month used every reasonable means to collect *622 them. On the 14th day of October, 1932, having failed to collect the warrants, the Bank of Commerce sent them for collection to the Bank of Picayune, the other depository for Pearl River county. On the same day the Bank of Picayune acknowledged receipt of the warrants, and in its letter of acknowledgment expressly stated that they were received for collection and not for credit, and its books showed that fact.

The Bank of Picayune did not credit the Bank of Commerce with the warrants, nor did it credit the county with them, nor did the Bank of Commerce credit the county with them when it received them. The Bank of Picayune sent the warrants, together with other warrants of the county received from the Bank of Commerce, to the Merchants’ Bank & Trust Company of Jackson for collection. In its letter of transmittal it advised the Merchants ’ Bank & Trust Company that the warrants were the property of Pearl River county and were being sent for collection only. After the warrants had been received by the Merchants’ Bank & Trust Company, the Bank of Picayune was diligent in urging their collection. It wrote many letters to the Merchants ’ Bank & Trust Company, in some of which it was stated that Pearl River county was badly in need of the school funds to be derived from the collection of the warrants. On October 24, 1932, the Merchants’ Bank & Trust Company collected one of the warrants (not one of the warrants here involved), the proceeds of which it thereupon credited to the Bank of Picayune, whereupon the latter credited the amount to the Bank of Commerce and advised the Bank of Commerce and the chancery clerk of Pearl River couiity of the collection. Thereupon the Bank of .Commerce accepted the credit as cash and charged the Bank of Picayune therewith on its books, and as county depository credited Pearl River county with the amount and issued its depository receipt therefor. Another one of the warrants (not one of these here involved) was col *623 lected by the Merchants’ Bank & Trust Company in December, 1932, and likewise credited to the Bank of Picayune, whereupon the Bank of Picayune drew its draft on the Merchants ’ Bank & Trust Company payable to the Bank of Commerce, and sent the same to the Bank of Commerce, advising the chancery clerk of that fact and suggesting to the clerk that he issue to the Bank of Commerce as county depository the statutory receive warrant. Upon receipt of this draft the Bank of Commerce accepted it as cash, and as county depository credited Pearl River county therewith and issued the statutory receipts therefor.

The Merchants’ Bank & Trust Company was a state depository, but as such had only qualified to receive approximately two hundred thirty-five thousand dollars of the state funds, for the reason that the amount of its security pledged for the funds was of the par value of only two hundred sixty-one thousand five hundred dollars. It carried on its books three state accounts, only two of which are necessary to be considered here. One account was the bond and interest account, in which, on February 28, 1933, the state had more than one million dollars; the other was the general fund account. Under the law, beginning January 1, 1933, it was necessary that all public funds of the state be impounded until there had accumulated enough to meet its bonds and interest coupons maturing prior to August 1, 1933.

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Bluebook (online)
151 So. 756, 168 Miss. 612, 1934 Miss. LEXIS 355, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pearl-river-county-v-merchants-bank-trust-co-miss-1934.